Boo! Pixar is developing a third movie in the popular โMonsters Inc.โ franchise.
The project was revealed in a lengthy Wall Street Journal profile that examined the inner workings at Pixar, as the animation studio debuts its latest release, โHoppers.โ
The franchiseโs first movie, 2001โs โMonsters, Inc.,โ operates on the premise that monsters must scare children to power the city. The movie, directed by now-Pixar chief creative officer Pete Docter and featuring the voices of John Goodman and Billy Crystal, was a massive hit at the box office, grossing $528.7 million worldwide. The 2013 prequel, โMonsters University,โ helmed by Dan Scanlon, outperformed the original with a $743.5 million global tally. The success spawned the sequel series โMonsters at Work,โ which ran for two seasons.
Itโs not immediately clear who will direct the next big screen installment, and plot details โ including where in the storyโs timeline the action will occur โ are being kept under wraps.
In addition to the โMonstersโ franchise, Pixar has a few more major sequels in the works, including Juneโs โToy Story 5,โ which sees Buzz Lightyear and a (balding!) Woody face off against a smart tablet; โThe Incredibles 3,โ dated for 2028 and helmed by โElementalโ director Peter Sohn; and a second โCocoโ movie, expected to debut in 2029.
But the studio is also taking some big swings on original stories, like next yearโs โGatto,โ about a feline thief in Venice. Pixar reportedly pivoted โOno Ghost Market,โ a project inspired by โAsian myths about supernatural bazaars where the living and dead interact,โ from a streaming series to a movie. The studio is also developing its first-ever musical, from โTurning Redโ director Domee Shi.
As for โHoppers,โ the animal-centric adventure earned $3.2 million in previews, and is projected to earn $35 million to $40 million from 4,000 theaters this weekend.